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  • May is Wildflower Month May 17, 2012
      May is underway, the month that is the bridge between Spring & Summer.  In the Santa Monica Mountains, it is a month of vibrant color.  The hillsides are bejeweled in blooms of yellow, orange, pink, white, purple & blue.  Flowers are strewn from here to there, seemingly at random, as if at the whim […]
    Kathy Vilim
  • The Wildlife Pond at Mount Cuba Center May 16, 2012
    I was thrilled to be invited to visit Mount Cuba Center last week, to interview some of the staff, and spend several delightful hours wandering around with my camera collecting images of this beautiful place, which is devoted to preserving the native plants of the Piedmont region. Mount Cuba Center is a 600 acre preserve […]
    Carole Sevilla Brown
  • My Garden’s Carbon Footprint May 15, 2012
    “It is difficult to bring people to goodness with lessons, but it is easy to do so by example.” ~Seneca   With spring we turn our attention in earnest to our gardens.  And this year as Earth Day loomed, I also turned my attention to what I was doing to be more environmentally conscious and earth friendly […]
    Donna Donabella
  • Build-A-Wetland May 14, 2012
    So I had my driveway re-done a few weeks ago, as I believe I mentioned, and as I was planting in the newly cleared space, it chanced to rain. And I discovered that while most of the area was pretty much exactly as it had been, there was a large section that now, as soon […]
    Ursula Vernon
  • A Tale of Quail May 11, 2012
    Just when I think I’ve run out of critters that will come to visit, someone new shows up. Wednesday we had some much-needed rain and the storm was ending. I glanced out the window that overlooks the backyard and I spotted a bird taking shelter under a wax myrtle. At first glance I thought it […]
    Loret T. Setters

#GardenChat

Looking Ahead

When summer gathers up her robes of glory,
And, like a dream, glides away.
~ Sarah Helen Whitman

Summer heat has for the moment waned and we’re enjoying comfortable days and almost chilly nights. The past few weeks of high temperatures paired with alternating days of heavy rain have combined to produce a bumper crop of tomatoes, peppers, summer squash, eggplant and more. After a week long vacation with the family (garden and technology-free) and feeling under the weather for a few days…I have more than enough to keep me busy picking, canning and freezing the abundant harvests!

At the moment I am caught up and have been working on other pressing family matters like preparations for the new school year which begins in just a couple of weeks. (Can you believe we have not one, not two, but THREE graduations in our family in 2011?!) Yes, it’s busy! Even though the vegetable garden is slowly winding down, I have been watching and delighting in one special crop that seems to be growing and thriving with no signs of slowing… the Musquee de Provence pumpkins I planted in memory of my youngest brother.

The seeds were tucked in late last spring on the south side of our house away from the rest of the gardens. The weather didn’t cooperate after sowing, it was dry and cool for a time, but summer weather finally settled in and the warm rains had the seeds sprouted in just a matter of days. A thick layer of compost and a mulch of straw and the vines were off and growing. With regular rain showers and the summer heat I haven’t done anything more than redirect the very lengthy vines every now and again, obviously I wasn’t paying attention as I did or I would have noticed this:

It’s big. It’s beautiful. It’s everything my brother would have loved about growing his first heirloom pumpkins. The timing of discovering it now is poetic, the legal trial concerning his death will finally have closure at the end of August as these vines are only just beginning to mature. I can honestly say I’m looking forward to fall arriving… and watching the pumpkins I planted for him light up the vines as they ripen. A very sweet ending to one season and a sweet beginning of the next.  Happy gardening, friends.

4 comments to Looking Ahead

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